Ravnskov U
J Clin Epidemiol. 1998 Jun;51(6):443-60. doi: 10.1016/s0895-4356(98)00018-3.
A fat diet, rich in saturated fatty acids (SFA) and low in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), is said to be an important cause of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular diseases (CVD). The evidence for this hypothesis was sought by reviewing studies of the direct link between dietary fats and atherosclerotic vascular disease in human beings. The review included ecological, dynamic population, cross-sectional, cohort, and case-control studies, as well as controlled, randomized trials of the effect of fat reduction alone. The positive ecological correlations between national intakes of total fat (TF) and SFA and cardiovascular mortality found in earlier studies were absent or negative in the larger, more recent studies. Secular trends of national fat consumption and mortality from coronary heart disease (CHD) in 18-35 countries (four studies) during different time periods diverged from each other as often as they coincided. In cross-sectional studies of CHD and atherosclerosis, one group of studies (Bantu people vs. Caucasians) were supportive; six groups of studies (West Indians vs. Americans, Japanese, and Japanese migrants vs. Americans, Yemenite Jews vs. Yemenite migrants; Seminole and Pima Indians vs. Americans, Seven Countries) gave partly supportive, partly contradictive results; in seven groups of studies (Navajo Indians vs. Americans; pure vegetarians vs. lacto-ovo-vegetarians and non-vegetarians, Masai people vs. Americans, Asiatic Indians vs. non-Indians, north vs. south Indians, Indian migrants vs. British residents, Geographic Study of Atherosclerosis) the findings were contradictory. Among 21 cohort studies of CHD including 28 cohorts, CHD patients had eaten significantly more SFA in three cohorts and significantly less in one cohort than had CHD-free individuals; in 22 cohorts no significant difference was noted. In three cohorts, CHD patients had eaten significantly more PUFA, in 24 cohorts no significant difference was noted. In three of four cohort studies of atherosclerosis, the vascular changes were unassociated with SFA or PUFA; in one study they were inversely related to TF. No significant differences in fat intake were noted in six case-control studies of CVD patients and CVD-free controls; and neither total or CHD mortality were lowered in a meta-analysis of nine controlled, randomized dietary trials with substantial reductions of dietary fats, in six trials combined with addition of PUFA. The harmful effect of dietary SFA and the protective effect of dietary PUFA on atherosclerosis and CVD are questioned.
富含饱和脂肪酸(SFA)且多不饱和脂肪酸(PUFA)含量低的高脂饮食被认为是动脉粥样硬化和心血管疾病(CVD)的重要成因。通过回顾关于人类饮食脂肪与动脉粥样硬化性血管疾病之间直接联系的研究来探寻这一假说的证据。该综述涵盖了生态学、动态人群、横断面、队列以及病例对照研究,还有仅针对脂肪减少效果的对照随机试验。早期研究发现的国家总脂肪(TF)和SFA摄入量与心血管死亡率之间的正向生态学关联,在规模更大、更新的研究中并不存在或呈负相关。18至35个国家(四项研究)在不同时间段内国家脂肪消费和冠心病(CHD)死亡率的长期趋势,相互背离的情况与相符的情况一样常见。在关于CHD和动脉粥样硬化的横断面研究中,一组研究(班图人与高加索人)提供了支持;六组研究(西印度人与美国人、日本人,日本移民与美国人、也门犹太人与也门移民;塞米诺尔和皮马印第安人与美国人、七国研究)给出了部分支持、部分矛盾的结果;在七组研究(纳瓦霍印第安人与美国人;纯素食者与蛋奶素食者及非素食者、马赛人与美国人、亚洲印第安人与非印第安人、印度北部与南部、印度移民与英国居民、动脉粥样硬化地理研究)中,结果相互矛盾。在21项关于CHD的队列研究(包括28个队列)中,CHD患者在三个队列中摄入的SFA显著多于未患CHD的个体,在一个队列中则显著少于未患CHD的个体;在22个队列中未发现显著差异。在三个队列中,CHD患者摄入的PUFA显著更多,在24个队列中未发现显著差异。在四项关于动脉粥样硬化的队列研究中的三项里,血管变化与SFA或PUFA无关;在一项研究中,它们与TF呈负相关。在六项针对CVD患者和无CVD对照的病例对照研究中,未发现脂肪摄入量有显著差异;在对九项大幅减少饮食脂肪的对照随机饮食试验进行的荟萃分析中,无论是总死亡率还是CHD死亡率都未降低,其中六项试验还添加了PUFA。饮食中SFA的有害作用以及饮食中PUFA对动脉粥样硬化和CVD的保护作用受到质疑。